[幹詰] Giants GM Sabean gets extension
相信各位巨人迷們 在知道Sabean又有延長兩年的合約 都覺得很幹!
不過 我還是把這篇轉貼過來
看看官方怎麼報導的吧!! = =+
07/13/2007 9:21 PM ET
Giants GM Sabean gets extension
Magowan says team to put more emphasis on development
By Chris Haft / MLB.com
The extension gives Giants GM Brian Sabean an idea of his future as he
prepares to make potential deals at the trade deadline. (Phelan M. Ebenhack/AP)
SAN FRANCISCO -- The Giants won't drop general manager Brian Sabean, although
they will drop their rigid adherence to a win-now approach.
Sabean, whose job security was widely considered to be tenuous, signed a
two-year contract extension with a club option for the 2010 season, the team
announced Friday.
"I'm deeply flattered," said the 51-year-old Sabean, whose winning percentage
entering Friday (.544, 927-777) ranks ninth among all GMs since 1950. "This is
a great first step for myself and the staff to get busy and turn our fortunes
around."
Sabean had seemed to be on the endangered species list since Spring Training,
when Giants owner Peter Magowan said that he would review the GM's performance
at the end of the season. The Giants, who haven't reached the postseason
since 2003, have fallen to last place in the National League West,
intensifying speculation that Sabean's contract wouldn't be renewed.
But Magowan said that he considered Sabean's overall record, which includes
four postseason appearances by the Giants between 1997 and 2003.
"I have a very good working relationship with Brian," Magowan said. "I trust
him and I believe he trusts me."
The timing of the announcement also was significant, given the proximity of
the July 31 trading deadline. Now, Sabean won't feel like a potential lame
duck as he plots the franchise's future.
"It puts Brian in a much better position to do what he feels he needs to do in
terms of making trades and whatever assessments are necessary to make than
would be the case if we were to wait until the October or November time frame,
" Magowan said. "We can get a running start on the '08 season by making these
moves now."
While backing Sabean, Magowan also declared his willingness to infuse his
aging roster with youth. This contrasts with the team's recent strategy of
surrounding left fielder Barry Bonds with complementary players, which
typically has meant adding veterans exceeding age 30.
Adding youth typically means rebuilding, which in turn typically means losing.
Magowan emphasized that the Giants haven't already forsaken playoff hopes for
2008.
"But to win," he said, "we'll probably need some pleasant surprises, which we
may get given our pitching."
Sabean said that the Giants would remain open to making trades that would
bring the team players such as outfielder Randy Winn or right-hander Livan
Hernandez -- young yet proven veterans in their late 20s or early 30s who
aren't saddled with enormous contracts.
But Magowan said that obtaining "rent-a-players" such as first baseman Shea
Hillenbrand, who cost the Giants promising reliever Jeremy Accardo last July,
won't happen.
Moreover, having built a competent starting rotation through drafting and
developing performers such as Matt Cain, Tim Lincecum and Noah Lowry, the
Giants will continue to focus on nurturing their own talent -- especially
position players, whom the Giants have struggled to produce in recent seasons.
Matt Williams, who played with the Giants from 1987-96, is the last All-Star
hitter to rise through the organization. Since Williams' departure, Bill
Mueller and Pedro Feliz are San Francisco's lone draftees to have emerged as
everyday players.
Magowan said that although the Giants have tried to win and develop players
simultaneously in the last several seasons, "I think the emphasis has been
more on winning than developing. It's a balance, and the balance is always in
flux because you might feel you're just a player or two players away. If
you're several players away, you put more emphasis on developing."
Magowan cited the Dodgers, Padres, Braves and Mets as examples of teams
possessing a decent mix of homegrown talent and players obtained through free
agency or trade.
"We don't have that strength of balance on our team," Magowan said. "We have
to strive to try to get a better one in the future."
Magowan's attitude adjustment caused barely a ripple among players. They
expected that some sort of change was imminent, given the team's disappointing
performance.
"It'd be irresponsible for him not to think that way. That's his job," Winn
said.
Winn, who's signed through 2009 and has a no-trade clause, remained committed
to being a Giant, even if the organization plans to rebuild as much as reload.
"I signed here to play here. I signed here to win here. I still think we can,"
he said. "[A fresh approach] is always a possibility when a team that has
high expectations and older players gets off to a bad start. I don't think
this comes as a surprise to any of the guys in the locker room or any of you
[reporters] that they're talking about this."
Left-hander Barry Zito, who's signed through 2013, called the organization's
redoubled commitment to youth and the farm system a "great approach" and noted
that enduring a losing season is often necessary before a team can right
itself.
"Short-term pain, long-term gain," Zito added. "It's not that we're willing to
sacrifice [next season]. I think it's just we're not going to kill ourselves
to win 100 games in 2008."
Chris Haft is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the
approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
--
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